Back/Snap tests creator subscriptions as platforms intensify competition for recurring revenue
tech·February 19, 2026·meta

Snap tests creator subscriptions as platforms intensify competition for recurring revenue

ED
Editorial
Cashu Markets·2 min read
TL;DR
  • Meta offers channel/subscriber products that set benchmarks for revenue splits and feature sets.
  • Meta's public materials indicate creators keep most subscription revenue after platform fees.
  • Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s Miami presence helps draw tech firms and executives to South Florida.

New creator revenue push

Snap is testing a paid Creator Subscriptions product as it seeks to build recurring, non‑advertising revenue from its most engaged users. The feature, rolling out with a small cohort of Snapchat creators, lets fans pay monthly fees set by creators between $4.99 and $19.99 for exclusive photos, videos, a subscriber‑only Story and prioritized text replies that can be highlighted in a public Story. Snap says the tool is supported by creator performance data to help guide pricing and experimentation during the trial.

Snap positions the offering as a way for creators to secure stable income and deepen ties with fans. The company tells creators they will retain roughly 60% of subscription revenue after platform fees, and executives describe the approach as rooted in “real relationships” that reward recurring engagement rather than one‑off hits. The test follows the expansion of Snap’s paid services overall: Snapchat+ and Memories Storage Plans grow to about 24 million users, up 71% year‑over‑year, a sign of the company’s push into subscription models as user growth moderates.

The launch places Snap squarely in competition with established direct‑to‑fan platforms and major social networks’ in‑app subscriptions. Firms such as Patreon, Substack and OnlyFans already serve creators directly, while YouTube and Meta operate channel or subscriber products that set benchmarks for revenue splits and feature sets; Meta’s public materials indicate creators can keep most subscription revenue after fees on its platforms. Snap’s offering tests whether a lower revenue share and Snap’s unique messaging and ephemeral formats can persuade creators and paying fans to shift behavior and produce more predictable monetization beyond advertising.

Palantir’s Miami relocation highlights regional pull

Palantir’s decision to move its headquarters to Miami underscores a broader migration of tech executives and firms to South Florida. The trend draws attention because Meta’s CEO Mark Zuckerberg and other industry figures have established a presence in the area, contributing to a growing local ecosystem of venture capital, hedge funds and startups that firms view as attractive for recruiting and lifestyle reasons.

Subscription competition intensifies across tech

The creator‑subscription push is one element of a wider industry shift toward diversifying revenue beyond ads and into recurring payments and creator services. As major platforms iterate on in‑app subscriptions, firms are racing to balance competitive revenue shares, discovery tools and product features to win creators’ loyalty and fans’ wallets.